Sentences with phrase «way cells»

In many ways cell phones have made life so much easier - easier to get in touch with other people and lots easier to say what we have to say in short little sentences.
Scientists can then grow the muscle cells and develop them in a lab the same way the cells would grow on a living organism.
One way cells turn genes on and off is via small RNA molecules.
What's relevant is how many ways each cell can connect with the others.
The phone has additional sensors, such as a compass, built into it to determine which way the cell phone's camera is pointing when it takes a photograph.
The artist is particularly concerned with the sometimes mysterious and volatile ways cells to operate and respond to their environment, and how these processes can be viewed as metaphors for our tumultuous times.
Even rapamycin regulates way cells respond to insulin and IGF, albeit in this case by turning up the pathway rather than turning it down.
Teams in the U.S. and the U.K. have developed stem cell — based models of Alzheimer's that behave the same way cells do in the human brain.
«New way cells turn off genes.»
Bales's group wants to fund legitimate clinical trials involving stem cell treatments to help determine in what ways the cells can help patients.
Several well - known neurodegenerative diseases, such as Lou Gehrig's (ALS), Parkinson's, Alzheimer's, and Huntington's disease, all result in part from a defect in autophagy — one way a cell removes and recycles misfolded proteins and pathogens.
However, multitasking is a common way cell phone use interferes with relationships.
Sometimes mutations in DNA can cause changes in the way a cell behaves, as orchestrated by God.
«We've been targeting human cells with therapeutics that modulate the way the cell makes lipids, and we like to target the human cell because it isn't likely to mutate and become resistant to the drug.
Mitochondria serve as the power source of cells, and they play an important role in the way cells function in the body.
This collaboration reflects work of The Center for Engineering Mechanobiology, a National Science Foundation - funded Science and Technology Center that supports interdisciplinary research on the way cells exert and are influenced by the physical forces in their environment.
Neuroscientists usually explain color illusions in mechanistic terms: They arise because of the way cells in the retina and the brain respond to certain wavelengths of light.
It is important to understand the way the cells got down there, because that has implications for their age.
According to Harkema, the DHA could be changing the way these cells, also known as macrophages, react to the silica in the lungs and somehow alter the immune system's response.
Some of the molecular details are unknown, but Phadnis and colleagues propose that discrepancies between Hmr and Lhr may mess with the way cells divide their chromosomes.
By performing experiments in petri dishes and with mice, they found that panobinostat, a drug designed to change the way cells regulate genes, may be effective at inhibiting DIPG growth and extending survival rates.
A graphene resonator on board could tune to signals at a particular frequency, the way a cell phone does, but it would be extraordinarily tiny and use very little power.
An international team of researchers has developed miniscule, self - propelled devices that mimic the way cells move.
«We discovered that protein aggregation is a way cells can create spatial patterns in molecules called transcripts, which are the intermediaries between the DNA and proteins,» says senior author Dr. Amy Gladfelter of Dartmouth College.
Tavazoie points out that «it is remarkable that within a single cell type, synonymous changes in genetic sequence can dramatically affect the levels of specific proteins, their transcripts, and the way a cell behaves.»
«Namely, when the way cells package DNA into nucleosomes breaks down, damage occurs.»
The molecular equivalent of writing one RNA letter in a different font can change the way a cell's protein - building machinery interprets the genetic code, Yitao Yu and John Karijolich of the University of Rochester in New York report in the June 16 Nature.
The result would not be a clone because of the way cells divide during sexual reproduction — the fertilised egg would not be genetically identical to the original iPS cells — but it would be something very strange and dangerous.
The way these cells organize themselves structurally in different organ systems helps them coordinate their amazingly diverse behaviors and functions, keeping the whole biological machine running smoothly.
The latest frontier in this search for cancer telltales is the cellular process of endocytosis, which is the way cells take outside materials like proteins inside.
This is one way cells «lock up» genes to keep them from being activated.
Fritz - Laylin will not only clock the speed of the cell (which can be done with lower resolution techniques); she'll look at the way the cell deforms itself as it moves as well as how the flow of its internal structures contributes to the movement.
A few neurologists and brain scientists are proposing that the secret underlying all conscious activity must lie with the way cells respond to stimuli they receive from their environment.
But the growth environment plays a large role in the ways the cells develop.
His new institute will probe the way cells organize into tissues.
Sperm dysfunction can arise from the way these cells are built.
Alix therefore functions as a «molecular bridge» that also determines the polarity of individual epithelial cells, namely the way cells are oriented with respect to one another within the epithelial cell layer.
Titus says that the way the cells were developed means recipients don't need immunosuppressants.
He notes that his group does not know exactly how antibiotic resistant bacteria are killed off, but that interfering with the way a cell manipulates its DNA often causes cell death.
They did discover that the inhibition changes the ways cells move within lymph nodes and the spleen, organs in which T follicular helper cells interact with B cells to promote antibody production.
But the way cells typically translate the SMN2 DNA sequence, most of its protein is truncated and is quickly degraded.
An «inadequate description of the method,» due to the lack of a description of the way cells should give birth to new neurons
The study is the first demonstration that the way cells organise themselves influences their ability to communicate.
«The ketogenic diet is thought to work by changing the way cells produce energy, and for reasons that are not fully understood, this shift in energy production calms the excitability within epileptic brains,» says Rho, professor and a member of ACHRI and the HBI.
The study, published today in Nature, is the first demonstration that the way cells organise themselves influences their ability to communicate.
Ubiquitination is one way a cell is told what to do through management of the proteins within it.
My colleagues and I at the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute and the Laboratory of Regenerative Medicine, University of Cambridge analysed the way this membrane affects stem cells and are now looking at how they effect heart muscle cells, and found that it might be able to change the way cells behave, without all the trouble of altering their genetic code.
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